The insinuation was in her voice as well as in her words.
2
The insinuation wounded Pitt deeply; and his intercourse with Auckland entirely ceased.
3
She knew the value of insinuation in such a battle as this.
4
There seemed to her to be a covert insinuation in the remark.
5
Her mind had been overwrought, and she caught insinuation in his voice.
Ús de ingratiation en anglès
1
A hansom cab offers peculiar facilities for the aforesaid process of ingratiation.
2
Not a hint of ingratiation, and all the more winning for that.
3
Not merely by ingratiation or sincerity, and not by being famous or beautiful.
4
But I liked her startling asperity; the idea that mentioning him was an ingratiation.
5
The woman shifted her position, and changed her tone to one of cunning ingratiation.
6
The old fellow had a nice line in self-pitying ingratiation.
7
He could not resist her beauty, her warmth, her ingratiation.
8
He said in a voice permanently gruff, but impregnated with a species of professional ingratiation:
9
He had a remarkable gift of ingratiation with anyone who could be of service to him.
10
It was as if she were amused, not absent-minded nor yet a prey to the feminine immorality of ingratiation.
11
For Gordy, when absolutely forced to face an unknown woman, could bring to the encounter a certain bluff ingratiation.
12
Marie stood framed in her wild cucumber-vine, regarding the captain with her pretty ingratiation, but not another smile she got.
13
He petted her, and she slid into his arms with a child-like ingratiation that made his heart swell with pity.
14
The only other way was by ingratiation, but I was damned if that was ever going to happen to me again.
15
No wonder that Judd, unlike his foremost contemporary, the all-forgiving Andy Warhol, has no iconic presence in the larger culture: he is ingratiation-free.
16
A normal reaction might run the gamut from panic, fear, and offers of cooperation, through self-pity and ingratiation to anger, even defiant threats.